In light of the fact that the US has no military option to defend Ukraine, and that sanctions on Russia will harm the US economy, the smart move in Ukraine would have been to cut a deal with Putin that conceded Ukraine in exchange for Russian cooperation on other fronts important to the US.
By Caroline B. Glick, ISRAEL HAYOM
A Ukrainian soldier looks on at the front line in Donetsk region, eastern Ukraine, Thursday, Feb. 17, 2022 (AP via Ukrainian Presidential Press Office)
Several commentators have argued in recent days that the crisis between Russia and Ukraine has been a godsend for President Joe Biden ahead of the midterm elections in November.
The argument is fairly straightforward. With tough talk and without endangering any US forces, Biden is managing to block Russian President Vladimir Putin from carrying through on his plan to invade Ukraine. Since Biden and his advisors have been signaling that such an event would precipitate a US-Russian war, (i.e., World War III), simply by talking tough, Biden is preventing a world war. Obviously, this is a historic, indeed, an epic achievement that without question blots out Biden’s incompetent and strategically disastrous surrender in Afghanistan from the public’s memory.
While at first glance this claim seems reasonable, (on Thursday morning, when these lines were being written, Russia had not invaded Ukraine), it is problematic on several counts. The first problem with the claim is that according to an ABC News poll, most Americans don’t care about the events in Ukraine and believe the US should stay out of the conflict. It’s hard to see how Biden’s actions in an area that Americans are unconcerned with will move the needle of public support in Biden’s favor. Americans cared about Biden’s decision to lose the war in Afghanistan and leave in humiliation because it was an American war that he chose to end dishonorably. Ukraine is not America’s war. So the public doesn’t care.
Beyond the fact that Americans don’t really care about what happens to Ukraine, there is a second problem, which is that Biden’s messaging on Ukraine and Russia is demonstrably false and misleading.
The first misleading message that the administration has been using is that a Russian invasion of Ukraine would precipitate World War III because it would put the US in a direct shooting war with Russia. This claim is simply wrong. In his speech Tuesday, Biden made clear that the US will not go to war to defend Ukraine. It will not send US forces to fight on Ukraine’s behalf. This is a statement that Biden and his advisors have made multiple times in recent weeks. And the statement on its own is enough to make clear that there is no chance of a world war opening as a consequence of a Russian invasion.
Biden’s dismissal of a US-Russian war as a possible outcome of a Russian invasion is not a function of any anti-war predisposition on his part. It is a function of four considerations, which are not subject to change.
First, the US public is unprepared and unwilling to go to war against Russia. With 53% of Americans opposing US involvement in the Ukraine crisis, a presidential decision to go to war is unthinkable.
Second, the US has no formal commitment to defend Ukraine’s independence. For nearly 20 years, successive administrations have worked behind the scenes to block any possibility of Ukrainian membership in NATO because they don’t want to be formally committed to protecting Ukraine from Russia.
This then brings us to the third reason the US will not take up arms to defend Ukraine. While the US national interest is advanced by an independent Ukraine willing to stand up to Russia and welcomes the US and the EU as allies, that interest cannot compete with the US interest in avoiding war with Russia. And as a result, it is against the US’s national interest to wage war for Ukraine.
Finally, the US has a limited military capacity to fight a ground war in Ukraine against Russia. Russia has 150,000 troops deployed along its border with Ukraine. Russian President Vladimir Putin can manage their logistical supply lines because they are in Russia.
The US has neither the forces nor the will to send tens of thousands of soldiers to Ukraine to fight the Russian army. It cannot compete.
So far from rebuilding US credibility on the world stage after his Afghanistan debacle, Biden’s empty threats of world war have exposed America’s weakness and the hollowness of the US’s commitment to its allies.
Biden hasn’t only been bluffing about the prospect of world war. He is also bluffing about sanctions. Biden said Tuesday that if Russia invades Ukraine, the US will impose sanctions on “key industries” in Russia. But just as his talk of World War III was entirely empty, so his threats of sanctions have no foundation in reality.
Immediately after pledging to impose sanctions in retaliation for a Russian invasion of Ukraine, Biden said that such sanctions – presumably on Russia’s energy exports to the West – will also hurt Americans in their pocketbooks.
With inflation rates in the US at 39-year highs, and with public faith in their president’s stewardship of the economy at all-time lows, you don’t need to be an A-list political consultant to understand there is zero chance that in an election year Biden will impose sanctions on Russia that will boomerang against US consumers.
The argument that Biden comes out ahead from the Ukraine crisis also ignores what Putin has gained from the crisis on the one hand, and what the US has lost on the other hand.
Without ordering any of his soldiers to cross the Russian border into Ukraine, Putin has already achieved what he set out to accomplish: keeping Ukraine permanently out of NATO.
This brings us to NATO itself. On Tuesday, Biden claimed that the Ukraine crisis has made NATO stronger and more unified than ever. But the opposite is the case. By threatening Kyiv, Putin exposed that at least as far as Russia is concerned, NATO is no longer a functioning military alliance. Poland, the Baltic states, and other former Warsaw Pact nations that joined NATO after the Cold War continue to view Russia as a threatening enemy. Germany, France, and other Western European NATO members view Russia as a partner. Throughout the current crisis in Ukraine, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has been acting more like Russia’s ally than America’s. Scholz recently put forward the suggestion that Ukraine should accept the status that Finland suffered throughout the Cold War. It was independent in its domestic affairs but compelled to toe Moscow’s line in its security policies and international positions. Notably, last year Putin penned an article touting precisely this position.While Biden hasn’t formally agreed not to bring Ukraine into NATO, his announcement that the US will not defend Ukraine against a Russian invasion, while 150,000 Russian troops are poised at the Ukraine border threatening to invade leaves no room for doubt that Ukraine will not be made a NATO member nation. Not now, and not in the foreseeable future. For all intents and purposes, Biden’s speech on Tuesday transformed Ukraine from a US client state into a Russian satellite state.
While it still remains unclear if Putin will invade Ukraine, it is also unclear why he would feel it necessary to do so. Simply by sending his troops to the Ukraine border, he ended any chance of Ukraine joining NATO and effectively destroyed NATO as an anti-Russian military alliance.
This brings us to the direct losses the US has suffered due to Biden’s handling of the Ukraine crisis. Rather than undo the damage he caused to US credibility with his abject surrender of Afghanistan to the Taliban, Biden exacerbated the damage. By threatening war one moment and pledging not to go to war the next, Biden turned himself – and through him, the United States of America – into a joke on the world stage. When Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky felt compelled to tell Biden to tone down his rhetoric about an imminent Russian invasion twice in under a week, and insist Biden’s warnings did not correspond with the situation on the ground, it became clear that US support is not what it once was. Biden’s “support” for Ukraine has arguably done Ukraine more harm than good in the present emergency.
When seen in the context of Biden’s wider foreign policy, his decision to adopt a saber-rattling posture while declaring he has no saber to rattle is even more disturbing. While making entirely empty threats at Russia, Biden is genuflecting before Iran and China. Taken together, it becomes impossible to claim that Biden’s handling of the Russian threat to Ukraine has strengthened him either domestically or internationally.
Given its destructive effect on both the US and NATO, what stands behind Biden’s strategically indefensible position on Ukraine?
It would seem that like most aspects of Biden’s policies, this one too is rooted in domestic US power politics.
For the past three years, Special Prosecutor John Durham has been investigating the apparent conspiracy hatched and executed by Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign to defeat candidate and later president, Donald Trump, by falsely accusing him of being a Russian agent.
In a court filing last Friday, Durham revealed that the conspiracy was apparently not limited to Clinton’s campaign apparatus. The Obama White House and US intelligence agencies were also involved in the plot against Trump. Specifically, Durham revealed that both Clinton’s campaign and partners in the White House unlawfully listened to Trump’s electronic communications which were carried out at Trump Towers, in his transition team headquarters, and apparently in the White House after he was inaugurated in January 2017.
The false claims against Trump that were generated by the Democrat Party and the national security establishment and pumped into the public’s bloodstream by the media made it impossible for Trump and his advisors to advance their plans to develop constructive relations with Russia. Their intention had been to entice Putin to abandon Russia’s partnership with Iran in Syria, and they hoped to divide Russia away from China as well.
But with Trump and his closest advisors under investigation by a politicized FBI and Justice Department, under allegations of collusion with Russia generated by opposition research funded by the Clinton campaign, and with the media pumping the story into the public bloodstream, Trump could not go through with his planned policies. He was compelled to oppose Russia at all turns. As a consequence, during his presidency, Russia grew closer to both Iran and China, to the detriment of the US.
In light of the fact that the US has no military option to defend Ukraine, and that sanctions on Russia will harm the US economy, the smart move in Ukraine would have been to cut a deal with Putin that conceded Ukraine in exchange for Russia cooperation on other fronts important to the US. Had Biden sought such a deal, he would have preserved NATO intact, caused no further harm to US credibility, and, perhaps, gotten Russia on board in areas where Russia and the US have common interests. But after five years during which Biden and his party have painted Putin as humanity’s Enemy Number 1, Biden had no choice but to continue castigating Putin and Russia. And so he did. And thus NATO, and the US’s credibility as an ally have become the latest victims of the Trump-Russia conspiracy.
@Adam Dalgliesh
The Guardian is a British newspaper (’nuff said).
We will never be able to find out who did what to whom in this case but I have to mention that the military assault on the self-proclaimed Donetsk and Lugansk Republics was started by Ukraine in (as I remember) April of 2014.
@Bear This article makes it sound like Biden is prepared for war https://www.cbsnews.com/news/biden-putin-warning-russia-invades-ukraine/
This is from the February 18 Guardian. I think we all know that the Guardian is not a pro=American or anti-Russian newspaper. Its leanings are left, not right. So I think we should all take this report seriously.
So far, it looks like Ukraine will attack and the West will call it a Russian invasion.
“Bricks, mortar, and toys” – they are from the kindergarten in Lugansk Republic blown up by the Ukrainian forces.
@Bear. Good point.
From AP.
Caroline is quite right that NATO and the United States are unlikely to react strongly to Putin’s threats and bullying, or even if he decides on a full-scale invasion. On the other hand, U.S.-Russian relations may be set back for a whole generation, the way they were in Cold War I (1945-91). The U.S will not trust Russia for a long time, and every time either country makes some kind of military or diplomatic move, the other will make war preparations. In the long run, not good.
One thing completely erroneous about this article is that Glick says Biden has signaled that if Russia captures the Ukraine the US will go to war over this. Biden has said the USA will apply sanctions and explicitly stated USA will not go to war over Ukraine.